Congress Reiterates Demand for Probe Into Allegations Against Facebook

In the light of allegations that the social media giant did not implement its hate speech laws to favour BJP politicians, Rahul Gandhi said its “brazen assault” on India’s democracy and social harmony has been “exposed”.

New Delhi: Claiming a “nexus” linking the BJP and Facebook, the Congress on Tuesday asked an inquiry into it, with Rahul Gandhi stating that international media has “exposed” the social media giant’s “brazen assault” on India’s democracy and social harmony.

Tweeting against the social media giant, Gandhi tagged a recent report by the Wall Street Journal on how questions were raised by Facebook employees on its India team’s neutrality after an executive posted internal messages allegedly favouring the BJP.

“International media have fully exposed Facebook’s and WhatsApp’s brazen assault on India’s democracy and social harmony,” he said.

“No one, let alone a foreign company, can be allowed to interfere in our nation’s affairs. They must be investigated immediately and when found guilty, punished,” Gandhi tweeted.

The Congress released a statement on Tuesday saying that as “elucidated” by the Wall Street Journal and Time, Facebook India and WhatsApp have been used to promote Modi and the BJP’s social media campaign.

Meanwhile, IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, in a three-page letter to Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg, alleged “bias and inaction” by individuals in the Facebook India team on complaints by people supportive of right-of-centre ideology.

Also Read: On BJP’s Request, Facebook Pulled Down 14 of 44 Flagged Pages, Reinstated 17 Deleted Pages

Tagging Prasad’s letter to Zuckerberg on Twitter, Congress’ chief spokesperson Randeep Surjewala claimed, “Modi Government comes to the rescue of prejudiced offenders of Facebook India as the ugly nexus is exposed!…. This is ‘pot calling the cattle black’.”

He also questioned why the Modi government was not agreeing to a JPC probe into the issue.

Another report in the Wall Street Journal earlier this month and one in Time magazine had brought to fore similar allegations that the social media giant did not implement its hate speech rules against BJP leaders and “Hindutva pages and accounts”. The reports said that Facebook India’s public policy head Ankhi Das was of the opinion that acting against such accounts would harm the social media platform’s business prospects in the country.

Citing international media reports, the Congress in its statement asserted that Facebook’s global leadership has been aware of the biases and partisanship but remained willing participants, “proving that the unholy nexus between BJP-FB has hit the nerve-centre of our nation’s democratic functioning”.

This blatant shielding of BJP-leaning Facebook pages is nothing short of a deliberate attempt to manipulate the public opinion in India, the party alleged.

“The blasphemous nexus between the BJP and Facebook is for all to witness and must be investigated without delay,” it said.

The Congress has written two letters to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg seeking action against its India team, an independent probe into their functioning and replacing them.

Facebook has claimed that its platform prohibits hate speech and content that incites violence, adding these policies are enforced globally without regard to political affiliation.

(With PTI inputs)

Collusion of Some FB Staff With Media Allows Vested Interests To Cast Doubts on Indian Democracy: IT Minister to Zuckerberg

This letter comes after several media reports of Facebook’s public policy head Ankhi Das supporting PM Modi and disparaging the Congress in internal messages. Prasad’s letter seeks to paint a distinctly different narrative.

New Delhi: Minister of Communications and Information Technology, Ravi Shankar Prasad, on Tuesday evening wrote to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, claiming that he had been informed that the social media giant’s India management team had deleted right-wing pages or “reduced their reach” right before the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

Prasad also alleged that there are Facebook employees who are “on record” as having abused Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other senior Cabinet ministers while still working in the India management team or in important positions within the company.

The three-page letter to Zuckerberg comes a day before the meeting of a Parliamentary committee where Opposition parties are likely to raise the issue of Facebook India’s alleged bias towards the Bharatiya Janata Party. It also comes after several international media reports of its public policy head Ankhi Das supporting Prime Minister Narendra Modi and disparaging the Congress in internal messages.

Also read: On BJP’s Request, Facebook Pulled Down 14 of 44 Flagged Pages, Reinstated 17 Deleted Pages

The IT minister’s letter, however, seeks to paint a different narrative, one of Facebook India being biased against people who are supportive of  “right of centre” ideology.

Ankhi Das with Mark Zuckerberg. Photo: Facebook/ankhid

“I have been informed that in the run up to 2019 general elections in India, there was a concerted effort by Facebook India management to not just delete pages or substantially reduce their reach but also offer no recourse or right of appeal to affected people who are supportive of right-of-centre ideology,” Prasad wrote.

Stating that dozens of emails written to Facebook management received no response, he said such “documented cases of bias and inaction are seemingly a direct outcome of a dominant political beliefs of individuals in your Facebook India team”.

On Tuesday, media reports claimed that BJP IT cell head Amit Malviya had asked Facebook officials to take action against 44 pages opposed to the party, reinstate 17 pro-BJP deleted pages, monetise two right-wing pages, and “shield” eight pro-BJP pages.

In his letter, the IT minister also implied that many senior officials of Facebook India’s team, including MD Ajit Mohan, are supporters of political beliefs that lost in the country’s recent elections.

Also read: New Report Says Facebook’s Ankhi Das Supported Modi, Hoped for BJP’s Victory

“People from this political predisposition have been overwhelmingly defeated by the people of in successive free and fair elections. After having lost all democratic legitimacy, they are trying to discredit India’s democratic process by dominating the decision-making apparatus of important social media platforms,” Prasad said.

Vested interests?

On recent media reports, Prasad notes that they  symbolise “deeply entrenched vested interests” who are not “satisfied with the shrinking space for one side of the spectrum in India and want to throttle it completely”.

“However, looking at recent media reports, it seems that these deeply entrenched vested interests aren’t satisfied with the shrinking space for one side of the spectrum in India and want to throttle it completely,” he said, without specifying the publication’s names.

BJP IT cell head Amit Malviya. Photo: Reuters/Twitter/amitmalviya, Illustration: The Wire

The spate of recent “anonymous, source-based reports is nothing but an internal power struggle within your company for an ideological hegemony,” the minister said in the letter.

He said no other logic could explain how facts were being spun by the “selective leaks from within the company” to try and portray “an alternate reality”.

Also read: Backstory: How Facebook and BJP Ring-Fenced India

“This interference in India’s political process through gossip, whispers and innuendo is condemnable. This collusion of a group of Facebook employees with international media is giving a free run to malevolent vested interests to cast aspersions on the democratic process of our great democracy,” said Prasad, who is also the Law Minister.

He also  pointed to multiple recent instances where Facebook had been used by “anarchic and radical elements” whose sole aim was to destroy social order, to recruit people and to assemble them for violence.

“However, we are yet to see any meaningful action against such elements. Is this action also held back by the same vested interest groups who have an incentive in stoking political violence and instability in India?,” he said.

Outsourcing of fact-checking to third party fact-checkers is a major issue with Facebook, he said, questioning just how Facebook could absolve itself of its responsibility to protect users from misinformation and instead outsource this to “shady organisations with no credibility”.

A 3D-printed Facebook logo is seen placed on a keyboard in this illustration taken March 25, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File photo

“We have seen in India that right from the assessors for on-boarding fact-checkers to the fact-checkers themselves, harbour publicly expressed political biases. Regularly vigilant volunteers on social media have to fact-check the fact-checkers!,” he emphasised.

Also read: Facebook Protected Assam BJP Leader Who Violated Hate Speech Guidelines: Report

Even after on-boarding many fact-checkers, misinformation related to COVID-19 and its aftermath went unchecked, the minister said.

“How can an organisation like Facebook be oblivious to these realities?,” he questioned.

A transnational digital platform with a wide user base cannot remain immune to local sensitivities either, he said, adding that in order to respect the social, religious, cultural and linguistic diversity of India, Facebook needs to put in place country-specific community guidelines.

Facebook has been a novel experiment in democratising the expression of people and giving a platform to millions of ordinary citizens to freely express their views and connect, the minister said.

“I hope that you are cognizant that this experiment should not be allowed to be hijacked by a vested lobby that abhors free speech and tries to enforce one world view and rejects diversity,” Prasad added.

(With inputs from PTI)

On BJP’s Request, Facebook Pulled Down 14 of 44 Flagged Pages, Reinstated 17 Deleted Pages

Last year in November, the BJP had asked Facebook India to “monetise” or allow two right-wing news websites – The Chaupal and OpIndia – to receive ad revenue for their content. 

New Delhi: The BJP had flagged a list of 44 pages opposed to the party to Facebook India ahead of the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, claiming they were “in violation of expected standards” and carried posts “not in line with facts”.

Of the 44 pages, 14 are no longer on Facebook’s platform, according to a report in the Indian Express.

The pages that have been taken down by Facebook include pages in support of journalists Ravish Kumar and Vinod Dua while those that had been flagged but continue to be on the platform include the official account of the Bhim Army, satire site “We Hate BJP”, unofficial Congress-supporting pages and a page called “The Truth of Gujarat”.

Additionally, 17 deleted pages that the BJP had asked Facebook India to reinstate are all back on the platform. Last year in November, the BJP had asked Facebook India to reinstate 17 deleted pages and “monetise” or allow two right-wing news websites – The Chaupal and OpIndia – to receive ad revenue for their content.

Facebook told the BJP IT Cell head Amit Malviya that the pages had been taken down “erroneously”.

Vikas Pandey, the founder of The Chaupal, told the Indian Express that his site has not been allowed monetisation after Facebook revoked its monetisation in March 2019.

None of the 17 pages reinstated by Facebook India at the behest of the BJP are directly labelled as being affiliated to any political party. The pages also share content almost exclusively from Postcard News and one of the pages took the name of Postcard News founder Mahesh V. Hegde, who was arrested in Bangalore in 2018 on charges of promoting communal enmity by posting “fake news”.

Watch | ‘Senior Facebook Execs Associated Themselves With Modi Even Before BJP’s Victory in 2014’

The police then conducted an investigation to determine whether Hegde had the support of BJP leaders. He was also represented in court by BJP leader and MP Tejasvi Surya. Facebook took down Postcard News official page in July 2018.

These requests for reinstating the pages came through emails between Malviya and Facebook India public policy executives Ankhi Das and Shivnath Thukral.

In emails from February 2019, Malviya referred to a meeting where he had discussed “shielding” certain BJP-leaning pages with Facebook India. Malviya said that Thukral had suggested the idea in a meeting in January 2019 to address pages that the BJP felt had been “wrongly targeted”.

Malviya said: “There were pages like I Support Narendra Modi and other large pages run by genuine volunteers who were fearful they might get struck down. We have in the past spoken to Facebook and asked them to do the right thing. They barely even respond to us. We were seeking a more transparent and fair system. Clearly, they have thought otherwise.”

Malviya had sent a reminder of the pages to be “shielded” in November, listing eight pages which included some of the biggest BJP supporting pages on Facebook.

In response to queries, a Facebook spokesperson said, “There is no term as shielding. We have a process called Cross-Check which is a system for reducing errors in enforcement by ensuring content from some Pages and profiles is given a second layer of review to make sure we’ve applied our policies correctly. It does not prevent enforcement action if a violation of our Community Standards is found.”

Upon being asked if public policy had an input on content decisions, the spokesperson said public policy has an input only if the designated content policy team decides to pull in other teams.

Also read: Backstory: How Facebook and BJP Ring-Fenced India

Malviya had sent a reminder of the pages to be “shielded” in November, listing eight pages which included some of the biggest BJP supporting pages on Facebook.

Facebook India has come under increasing scrutiny since The Wall Street Journal reported on August 14 that Facebook India opposed applying its hate speech rules to the BJP’s T. Raja Singh at the behest of Ankhi Das, who is Facebook’s top public policy executive in India.

New Report Says Facebook’s Ankhi Das Supported Modi, Hoped for BJP’s Victory

In internal messages accessed by the Wall Street Journal, Facebook India’s public policy head also ‘disparaged’ the Congress.

New Delhi: The day before Narendra Modi and the BJP swept to victory in the 2014 general elections, Ankhi Das – the head of Facebook’s public policy in India – wrote, “We lit a fire to his social media campaign and the rest is of course history,” on a group designed for the social media giant’s employees in the country.

This message, along with several others—posted between 2012 and 2014—were reported by the Wall Street Journal and suggest that they were in conflict with the company’s pledge to remain neutral in elections around the world.

In an article published on August 30, WSJ pointed to Das’s posts written for internal consumption each time the BJP, particularly Modi, benefitted electorally. In October of 2012, Das wrote, “Success in our Gujarat Campaign,” of the training of Modi’s BJP team, further noting that the campaign was close to reaching a million fans on Facebook.

Soon after this success, Modi was projected as a national leader and a campaign for national office was launched in full swing. Facebook once again offered training and assistance, the Wall Street Journal article states. Her Facebook colleague, Katie Harbath – a Republican and Facebook’s top global elections official – wrote that Das characterised Modi as “the George W. Bush of India,” according to a 2013 internal post featuring a photo of the two women and the future prime minister.

Also Read: Facebook Employees Internally Question Policy Over Ankhi Das Controversy in India

Other messages show Das praising Modi as the ‘strongman’ who ended the Congress’s hold. Before the 2014 elections, she wrote that Facebook had been lobbying the BJP for months to include the company’s top priorities in the party’s campaign. “Now they just need to go and win the elections,” she wrote.

Das has been a part of Facebook since 2011, a time when, the WSJ article says, the social media giant was eager to demonstrate its utility in politics. Facebook provided training services to several Indian political parties on how best to use the platform to mobilise supporters. Modi’s 2012 campaign for re-election as chief minister of Gujarat was also a part of this campaign.

This new report is crucial as Das is already at the centre of a political outcry in the country over Facebook’s handling of hate speech on the platform. An earlier WSJ piece published on August 14 said that Das, earlier this year, opposed moves to ban from the platform Telangana BJP MLA T. Raja Singh and other “Hindu nationalist individuals and groups” out of fear of ruining the company’s relationship with the ruling party. Singh made a series of posts and comments which targeted Muslims. He said Rohingya Muslims refugees should be “shot”, called Indian Muslims traitors and also threatened to raze mosques.

Though these comments clearly violated Facebook’s rules, the posts were not taken down initially. It was only after WSJ reached out to the company for comment that they were deleted.

Ankhi Das with Mark Zuckerberg. Photo: Facebook/ankhid

‘Disparaged’ opposition parties

The Journal‘s report also says Das ‘disparaged’ opposition parties in internal messages, saying in one post, “Don’t diminish him by comparing him with INC. Ah well—let my bias not show!!!” when one person pointed out that the official page of the Indian National Congress had a larger following on Facebook than Modi’s individual page.

She also seemed to suggest that she had close ties with the BJP’s senior leadership, when a day before the results of the 2014 general elections were announced, Das shared with colleagues BJP’s internal election predictions of a Modi victory. Das said she had obtained the information from a “senior leader and close friend in BJP”, according to WSJ.

Facebook, however, has supported Das and as quoted in WSJ, the social media platform has said the posts don’t show inappropriate bias. “These posts are taken out of context and don’t represent the full scope of Facebook’s efforts to support the use of our platform by parties across the Indian political spectrum,” spokesman Andy Stone said.

Also Read: Facebook Protected Assam BJP Leader Who Violated Hate Speech Guidelines: Report

Following the first WSJ article, Das lodged a complaint with the South Delhi police about threats that she received on social media. Identifying some Twitter accounts in the complaint, she has claimed that there is a threat to her life.

She also apologised to her colleagues for sharing a post on Facebook which called Indian Muslims a ‘degenerate community’.

Meanwhile, a parliamentary panel on information technology plans to summon Facebook officials to investigate allegations of bias. A Delhi assembly committee has begun proceedings in the matter and is investigating if the social media giant or its officials played a role in ‘orchestrating the Delhi riots’ of February this year.

Social Media and Populist Politicians are Natural Bedfellows

Right wing leaders around the world exploit a sense of victimhood among the population to consolidate their own vote bank.

Recently, a Wall Street Journal article claimed that Facebook India, under the stewardship of Ankhi Das, had demonstrated a clear bias towards the ruling BJP. Subsequently, news emerged that Das’ sister had been a member of the student wing of the Sang parivar affiliated ABVP while she was at JNU.

The role of individuals should and must be investigated, but just focusing on a few key players will prevent us from engaging with the broader political and indeed philosophical implications of social media as an inextricable part of what was earlier called the public sphere.

It is worth reflecting on the broad similarities between populist politicians and social media companies that make them such natural bedfellows. The former’s politics thrive on catalysing feelings of unfounded fear, anger, resentment and victimhood. The amplification of these emotions, amongst others, is precisely what social media thrives on.

Also Read: Afraid of Angering BJP, Facebook Ignored Hate Speech Rules for Party’s Anti-Muslim Posts: Report

The Internet has fundamentally reshaped the manner in which people engage with the world around them. In most parts of the world, a large percentage of the population enters the virtual world of the Internet without any tools to understand the nature of the beast. We quite literally ‘hold infinity in the palm of our hand’ but do we have the means to discern what is true from what is false or differentiate between what is beneficial and what is harmful?

The first and most important question that arises is whether people’s virtual identities can ever be a true reflection of who they really are. Rarely do we have the freedom, let alone the chance to build ‒ or to use that heavily overused term, ‘curate’ ‒ our own characters and personalities. Do we privilege certain aspects of our online identity to make us more popular? Public figures have always relied on moulding public perceptions of themselves but the means for mass dissemination are hitherto unprecedented. Perhaps the leading example of a person who harnessed the power of the image was Mahatma Gandhi. In one sense, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is just the latest in a long line of public figures who use the latest technology to carefully and painstakingly fashion a public profile of themselves.

PM Narendra Modi with a peacock. Photo: Instagram/@narendramodi

Tribal identities

Secondly, although social media is celebrated as connecting people in a hitherto unprecedented way, does this necessarily mean that the average person is becoming more broad-minded or cosmopolitan? Sadly, it seems that most social media actually thrives on entrenching ethnic, religious, nationalist, sectarian or other tribal identities. The people or organisations that define the measure of this tribalism ‒ what it means to “authentically” be Muslim, American or Indian ‒ are those with the means and money to influence social media. Thus, many people instinctively end up inhabiting echo chambers of their primary online identity. Clicks, likes, shares or retweets translate into little dopamine hits which inevitably, albeit unconsciously, push people towards holding views for which they will know they will receive appreciation.

Similarly, anger, fear and resentment give us an adrenalin rush as we leap to conclusions, lap up conspiracy theories and get furious about social, cultural, political or religious issues that we feel are under threat. Social media induces us into feeling we are permanently in a state of crisis.

Also Read: The Past and Future of Facebook and BJP’s Mutually Beneficial Relationship

Across the world, populist politicians, particularly those from the ‘right-wing’, seek to use this sense of victimhood amongst their voters in order to consolidate their vote bank. In one sense, victimhood is the glue that binds these constituencies to their political leaders. The politics of Benjamin Netanyahu and Alexsandar Vucic rest on portraying Israel and Serbia as perennial victims of unresolved conflicts. Donald Trump and Viktor Orban use anti-elite and anti-immigrant sentiment to amplify feelings of victimhood amongst their voters in the US and Hungary. Aside from anti-elite rhetoric, Narendra Modi, Jair Bolsanaro and Reçep Erdogan use religious nationalism to consolidate their vote base in India, Brazil and Turkey respectively. Vladimir Putin paints Russia as the world’s underdog.

(L-R) Donald Trump, Narendra Modi, Viktor Orban, Jair Bolsonaro and Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Photo: Reuters

Since social media is driven by individual personalities, all these leaders also portray themselves as victims, thus conflating ideology with their own persona. This is then used to instigate fear and anger amongst supporters. Fear and anger are neither good nor bad emotions. Anger against injustice has often led to deep social and political changes. However, this very anger can be weaponised when it stems from the fear of manufactured threats ‒ immigrants, minorities, elites, religious communities, political opponents, take your pick.

One instance of the weaponisation of anger is trolling. Trolling makes people even more intractable as battle lines are drawn without knowing whether the instigator is a bot, a paid operative or a normal person. What would be basic social etiquette in the real world breaks down. People parade their prejudice, abuse and issue threats without a second thought. As algorithms bombard us with information that reinforces our views, our tribal identities harden. Whether you believe in the racial or religious supremacy of a certain community or indeed believe Kermit the Frog controls that world, the ads on your profile will bring you news that will entrench this view.

We now live in times where we face “industrial levels of advertising, distraction and persuasion”, as James Wilson wrote in his book Stand Out of Our Light: Freedom and Resistance in The Attention Economy. An illustration of just how powerful these forces are is evident from the hundreds of billions of dollars that companies and indeed political parties have been spending on digital advertising. At the end of 2019, the global digital advertising industry was reported to be worth half a trillion dollars. That money is being spent to capture and hold our attention, the most valuable commodity in the world today.

Monetising attention

The entire social media eco-system depends and indeed thrives on monetising attention. Every day, most people hand out a few hours of their time for free, little realising that our attention is the oxygen that social media companies need to survive. Albeit unconsciously, people spend time on social media in order to seek out those little dopamine hits or adrenalin rushes and this partly explains why Facebook and its subsidiaries Instagram and WhatsApp can become and have become such potent weapons for populist politicians. It is not without reason that Amit Shah gloated a few years ago that he had the ability to spread any news, real or fake, negative or positive.

On the other hand, nuance, context, deep reflection and complexity are not rewarded online. This is precisely the reason why populist politicians, with their menacing and almost apocalyptic ‘black and white’ view of the world thrive on social media. With Facebook and Google acquiring a stake in Reliance’s communication business, Jio, this unholy partnership will also now include big business in India. Power and capital have always gone hand in hand, but now there is the added means of setting narratives and controlling or deflecting attention on a mass scale.

Also Read: We Are Witnessing the Revolt of the Elites

Just recently, the social media handles of Vikas Phatak aka Hindustani Bhau were removed for hate speech and instigation of violence. Saket Gokhale, an online activist, then claimed that Phatak, a former Big Boss contestant, was helped in building his online presence by Xovak Digital, a Gujarati company with deep links to the BJP. Of course, most people have no way of differentiating between the online profiles of someone who works independently as opposed to those who are supported by vast networks of power and capital.

For some time, across the world, we have been seeing what has been called ‘the gamification of politics.’ The distinction between reality and virtual reality is getting blurred. Recall the #MainBhiChowkidar campaign in the 2019 national elections which went from online to offline with #MainBhiChowkidar merchandise being sold at rallies. Remember when people could win a meeting with PM Modi if more than 100 people used their referral code to join BJP WhatsApp groups?

Social media platforms. Credit: Pixabay

Likes, shares and the number of followers become measures of popularity. Clickbait, powered by persuasive design, lures people into watching endless videos or buying into conspiracies. Truth and facts are manipulated in the name of freedom of opinion and free speech and fake news and hate speech reward people with 15 minutes of instant celebrity. It is, therefore, more important than ever to catalyse a public conversation about how our sense of self is undergoing a fundamental transformation and how political ideas are also being radically redefined.

Autonomy and choice can no longer be understood without taking into account the manner in which invisible algorithms bombard us with what they think we want or what they predict we should think and even feel. Citizenship and democracy have assumed more complex dimensions as the public sphere is now complemented by a virtual world in which targeted Facebook ads can shift a neutral person’s political views without them even being aware of it. New sets of laws and new institutions are now needed in order to redress the entirely unique challenges thrown up by social media. Indeed, a digital commons is needed in order to navigate a world where truth and fact have become contingent on one’s political leaning.

As James Williams argues, ‘the liberation of human attention may be the defining moral and political struggle of our time.’

Ali Khan Mahmudabad teaches at Ashoka University and regularly writes for the Urdu and English press. He is the author of Poetry of Belonging: Muslim imaginings of India 1850-1950 (OUP). He is a member of the Samajwadi Party. Twitter @mahmudabad 

‘Assess Human Agency Behind Algorithms’: Ex Civil Servants Write to Mark Zuckerberg

The letter urged the Facebook CEO to not let business prospects in the future deter the implementation of its policy against hate speech, noting that this could lead to hate crimes. 

New Delhi: A group of former civil servants has penned an open letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg expressing concern over recent reports that the social media giant had failed to take action against a BJP leader for hate speech.

On August 14, The Wall Street Journal reported that Facebook India opposed applying its hate speech rules to the BJP’s T. Raja Singh at the behest of Ankhi Das, who is Facebook’s top public policy executive in India.

In its letter, the Constitutional Conduct, a civil society group made up of retired civil servants, noted that it was “impartial and committed” to the Indian constitution and was writing to a “non-Indian body” for the first time to register its disapproval against Facebook’s alleged action over hate speech.

Pointing out that hate speech threatens to adversely affect democratic rights, the letter highlighted that Facebook defined hate speech as a direct attack on people for characteristics such as race, ethnicity, national origin, religious affiliation, sexual orientation, etc. The group further pointed out that Facebook’s inaction against T. Raja Singh and others for their “derogatory comments” against people belonging to a different religion and accusing Muslims of spreading COVID-19 was in contravention on its own policy.

Watch | ‘Senior Facebook Execs Associated Themselves With Modi Even Before BJP’s Victory in 2014’

The signatories also held that they were dismayed to learn that public policy head of Facebook India had consciously opposed applying Facebook’s hate speech rules to members of the ruling BJP for fear of jeopardising the company’s business prospects in India.

The letter also called attention to the rise in religious unrest across the nation in light of the recently enacted Citizenship Amendment Act, the proposed National Registry of Citizens, the communal riots that took place in February 2020 in the national capital and surge in ‘cow vigilantism’ and instances of lynching of members of the minority community. “Many of these crimes have been instigated through hate speech spread through various communication channels, such as Facebook, WhatsApp, and Twitter,” the signatories said and added that, despite being aware of it, Facebook had failed to implement its policy to curb hate speech in a non-partisan manner.

Noting that such behaviour on the part of Facebook had become a subject of debate in other countries as well, the group of retired civil servants noted that to “blame the algorithms of artificial intelligence is both to evade corporate responsibility and to deny the human agency involved in the framing of those very algorithms”.

The letter concluded by urging Zuckerberg to undertake “serious efforts to audit the implementation of Facebook’s hate speech policy in India” and not let business prospects in the future deter the implementation of its policy against hate speech and posts which can lead to hate crimes.

The entire text of the letter has been reproduced below.

§

An Open Letter to Mark Zuckerberg, CEO, Facebook

24 August, 2020

Dear Mr Zuckerberg,

We are a group of former civil servants of India belonging to the All India and Central Services, who have worked, in the course of our careers, with the Central Government as well as different State Governments of India. As a group, we have no affiliation with any political party but believe in being neutral, impartial and committed to the Indian Constitution. We have, in the past, written to the government and government institutions whenever we felt that the democratic rights of Indian citizens were being violated. We have not, so far, written to any non-Indian body. We are writing to you now, in a departure from our usual practice, because certain actions (or the absence of certain actions) by Facebook in their operations in India have thrown into danger some of the fundamental rights of the people of India. Our attention has been drawn to this by an article in the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) dated August 14th, 2020.

Most democratic countries assure their citizens of several basic rights and freedoms. Both the United States, the country of which you are a citizen, and India, do the same. Democratic rights can be adversely affected by hate speech, as you very well know. Which is why Facebook has made it part of its policy not to allow hate speech. Facebook defines hate speech as a direct attack on people for characteristics such as “race, ethnicity, national origin, religious affiliation, sexual orientation, sex, gender or gender identity and serious disabilities or diseases .”

Given this clear definition in your own policy, we are surprised that Facebook did not take action against some clear and serial offenders in India – persons like T. Raja Singh and a few others – for their derogatory comments against people belonging to a different religion, accusing Muslims of spreading Covid 19, indulging in ’love jehad’ and various other misdemeanours. What is striking about Facebook’s leniency towards these persons is that all of them happen to be members of the political party in power. That Facebook did consider the posts to be offensive is apparent from the fact that these posts were deleted on Aug 17, after the WSJ wrote to Facebook seeking its comments. We are dismayed to learn, again from the WSJ article, that the Public Policy Head of Facebook India consciously opposed applying Facebook’s hate speech rules to members of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) because doing so would adversely affect the company’s business prospects in India.

Mr Zuckerberg, you surely cannot be unaware that religious unrest has become a serious problem in India. The recently passed Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), coupled with the proposed National Registry of Citizens (NRC), threatens to take away the citizenship of hundreds of thousands of Muslims and other minorities in India and put them in detention centres.

A protester attends a protest against the CAA in New Delhi, India, December 14, 2019. Photo: Reuters/Adnan Abidi

You cannot also be ignorant of the communal riots that took place in Delhi in February 2020, in which 53 persons were killed, two thirds of them Muslims. Several cases of lynching and torture, primarily of Muslims and Dalits (oppressed castes and groups), have also occurred in India in recent years. The majority of these are related to ‘cow vigilantism’, i.e. religious extremists resorting to violence in apparent efforts to protect cows from being illegally slaughtered.

Many of these crimes have been instigated through hate speech spread through various communication channels, such as Facebook, WhatsApp, and Twitter. Despite being aware of this, Facebook has failed to implement its own policy of discouraging hate speech in India, or has implemented it in a clearly partisan manner. That this seems to have been done to protect Facebook’s commercial interests is even more reprehensible.

We note that such behaviour on Facebook’s part has become a subject of debate in other countries as well. Commercial interests at the cost of human lives? If these are the crass calculations Facebook indulges in, it is no surprise that the calculus of hate is spreading like a virus in many parts of the world. To blame the algorithms of artificial intelligence is both to evade corporate responsibility and to deny the human agency involved in the framing of those very algorithms.

We are writing to you in the expectation that you will make serious efforts to audit the implementation of Facebook’s hate speech policy in India and, while such an audit is under way, ensure that the present Public Policy Head of Facebook, India, is not in a position to influence the investigations. We also fervently hope that in future, you will not let your company’s business prospects stand in the way of implementing your own policy against hate speech and posts which can lead to hate crimes. This is a sure way of demonising minorities and inflicting violence upon them while undermining the democratic and secular basis of the Indian Constitution.

Yours sincerely,

Constitutional Conduct Group

( 54 signatories as below )

Salahuddin Ahmad

IAS (Retd.)

Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Rajasthan

Shafi Alam

IPS (Retd.)

Former Director General, National Crime Records Bureau, GoI

K. Saleem Ali

IPS (Retd.)

Former Special Director, CBI, GoI

Vappala Balachandran

IPS (Retd.)

Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI

Gopalan Balagopal

IAS (Retd.)

Former Special Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal

Chandrashekhar Balakrishnan

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Coal, GoI

Sharad Behar

IAS (Retd.)

Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Madhya Pradesh

Aurobindo Behera

IAS (Retd.)

Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Odisha

Sundar Burra

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra

P.R. Dasgupta

IAS (Retd.)

Former Chairman, Food Corporation of India, GoI

Nitin Desai

IES (Retd.)

Former Secretary and Chief Economic Adviser, Ministry of Finance, GoI

M.G. Devasahayam

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Govt. of Haryana

Sushil Dubey

IFS (Retd.)

Former Ambassador to Sweden

K.P. Fabian

IFS (Retd.)

Former Ambassador to Italy

Prabhu Ghate

IAS (Retd.)

Former Addl. Director General, Department of Tourism, GoI

Gourisankar Ghosh

IAS (Retd.)

Former Mission Director, National Drinking Water Mission, GoI

Suresh K. Goel

IFS (Retd.)

Former Director General, Indian Council of Cultural Relations, GoI

H.S. Gujral

IFoS (Retd.)

Former Principal Chief Conservator of Forests, Govt. of Punjab

Meena Gupta

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Ministry of Environment & Forests, GoI

Wajahat Habibullah

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, GoI and Chief Information Commissioner

Siraj Hussain 

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Department of Agriculture, GoI

Brijesh Kumar

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Department of Information Technology, GoI

Aloke B. Lal

IPS (Retd.)

Former Director General (Prosecution), Govt. of Uttarakhand

Subodh Lal

IPoS (Resigned)

Former Deputy Director General, Ministry of Communications, GoI

Harsh Mander

IAS (Retd.)

Govt. of Madhya Pradesh

Lalit Mathur

IAS (Retd.)

Former Director General, National Institute of Rural Development, GoI

Aditi Mehta

IAS (Retd.)

Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Rajasthan

Sonalini Mirchandani

IFS (Resigned)

GoI

Noor Mohammad

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, National Disaster Management Authority, Govt. of India

Deb Mukharji

IFS (Retd.)

Former High Commissioner to Bangladesh and former Ambassador to Nepal

Nagalsamy

IA&AS (Retd.)

Former Principal Accountant General, Tamil Nadu & Kerala

P.G.J. Nampoothiri

IPS (Retd.)

Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Gujarat

Alok Perti

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Ministry of Coal, GoI

M.Y. Rao

IAS (Retd.)

Satwant Reddy

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Chemicals and Petrochemicals, GoI

Vijaya Latha Reddy

IFS (Retd.)

Former Deputy National Security Adviser, GoI

Julio Ribeiro

IPS (Retd.)

Former Adviser to Governor of Punjab & former Ambassador to Romania

Aruna Roy

IAS (Resigned)

Manabendra N. Roy

IAS (Retd.)

Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal

Deepak Sanan

IAS (Retd.)

Former Principal Adviser (AR) to Chief Minister, Govt. of Himachal Pradesh

N.C. Saxena

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Planning Commission, GoI

A. Selvaraj

IRS (Retd.)

Former Chief Commissioner, Income Tax, Chennai, GoI

Ardhendu Sen

IAS (Retd.)

Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal

Abhijit Sengupta

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Ministry of Culture, GoI

Aftab Seth

IFS (Retd.)

Former Ambassador to Japan

Ashok Kumar Sharma

IFoS (Retd.)

Former MD, State Forest Development Corporation, Govt. of Gujarat

Ashok Kumar Sharma

IFS (Retd.)

Former Ambassador to Finland and Estonia

Navrekha Sharma

IFS (Retd.)

Former Ambassador to Indonesia

Raju Sharma

IAS (Retd.)

Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Uttar Pradesh

Jawhar Sircar

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Ministry of Culture, GoI, & former CEO, Prasar Bharati

Narendra Sisodia

IAS (Retd.)

Former Secretary, Ministry of Finance, GoI

Parveen Talha

IRS (Retd.)

Former Member, Union Public Service Commission

Geetha Thoopal

IRAS (Retd.)

Former General Manager, Metro Railway, Kolkata

Hindal Tyabji

IAS (Retd.)

Former Chief Secretary rank, Govt. of Jammu & Kashmir

Watch | ‘Senior Facebook Execs Associated Themselves With Modi Even Before BJP’s Victory in 2014’

The recent WSJ report is not the first time these allegations have been raised against the social media giant.

In a recent article, the Wall Street Journal said Facebook had consciously opposed applying hate-speech rules to members of the ruling party BJP – in contrast to similar action taken against white supremacist content. In fact, the article also alleges that a senior Facebook India member told its staff members that punishing violations by politicians from Mr Modi’s party would damage the company’s business prospects in the country.

It’s not the first time these allegations have been raised against the social media giant. In their book released in 2019, authors Paranjoy Guha Thakurta and Cyril Sam say that along with Facebook’s other arm WhatsApp a systematic web of fake and potentially dangerous news was spread, in the run-up to the elections and on a regular basis.

What’s going on inside Facebook and what are these business interests that are allowing hate speech to go unchecked in India? Here’s a conversation with the authors on Facebook, Whatsapp and their modus operandi in India.